Showing posts with label comic book fan film series Carrie Kelley Robin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label comic book fan film series Carrie Kelley Robin. Show all posts

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Happy Birthday Jill St. John!!!

I find it so hard to believe actress Jill St. John is 70 today!


But I'd better, since she is only two years younger than my own mother, and was a child actress in the late 1940s.


Born Jill Arlyn Oppenheim in Los Angeles on 19 August 1940, she made an impact on me on 12-13 January 1966, when I first saw her in the pilot episode of Batman.  I was 6½ years old at the time, but the episode was a powerful one for me.


Jill St. John, circa 1958
Somehow, I ended up with a love affair that rivals that of mine with the City of Albany, NY (and that dates back to at least 1964)!  By the time I got interested in her again in 1981, she had done Diamonds Are Forever, and I was a student at Syracuse University.  I did research on her at Bird Library at the university, and learned a lot in the process, including the process of researching.


I do not have pictures of her posted all over the place.  Indeed, she has her own life, out West, while I reside in New York.  But the "pretty lady" is a real creative inspiration for me, and thinking of her has helped me through hard times, both in the 1980s and again in the early 2000s.  She has her own section in my Catwoman fan site as well.  And she is the inspiration for the Carrie Kelley Robin who is the focus of the planned fan series as well!!


Happy Birthday, Ms. St. John!!!  May you have many more!

Friday, September 18, 2009

Stalled




I find it aggravating that my fan series is temporarily stalled. But my current fan film that I have had in production is taking priority, and it has to get completed, so that I can have something to show for my efforts over the past two years.

Tonight, I got great news: James Rowe, a friend of mine who worked with me on Batman 1969, has done a Carrie Kelley Robin outfit, based partly on Roberta the Girl Wonder (at left). Her outfit will be cut like that of the one Burt Ward and Jill St. John wore in the 1966 Batman series.


This really solves a problem I have had with the series: Outfitting the performers. God bless James for his work!

But I face challenges ahead, such as a possible loss of my job. Money is a problem right now. But I am intent on relocation to Albany and on securing a better job! God knows I have my work cut out for me! But so it goes!